πŸ—¨οΈ thoughts about gen ai from a for-profit blogger

Last year I tried to use gen AI for my for-profit blog1, partly because I didn’t want to be left behind on another new technology and partly because almost every blogger that I followed (at that time) was pushing its use2.

I spent several hundred dollars trying different things out, and while it was fun at first, it never actually did what I wanted it to do– or what those bloggers said it could do. Every output was just shitty enough that I’d have to spend hours fixing it, and by that point I might as well have just done the thing myself anyway.

It couldn’t help me do research, because it would literally make things up.

It gave me ideas for marketing, but it was just pushing the same tired five things that everyone else was already doing.

When I asked for its input on a business decision, it told me what it thought I wanted to hear and not actual advice.

And when I tried to use it for really data-intensive things, eventually it stopped remembering anything and I’d have to wipe it to start over, which was really annoying.

At the time, I didn’t know how generative AI worked. I had no idea that it wasn’t actually thinking, reasoning, or doing any research.

The way people (other bloggers) talked about AI was like it was a proper artificial intelligence, like a little thinking machine that could help you make Pinterest descriptions. It wasn’t until late last summer that I started seeing articles and videos about how gen AI actually works and why it’s bad for most of the things that people try to use it for.

Of course, in hindsight, it’s obvious those bloggers were pushing it because they’re making money from it. Meanwhile AI companies are stealing our stuff (our blog posts!) and regurgitating it back to us and we’re pretending that it’s amazing.

It felt like a big betrayal, that those bloggers cared more about making money than about actually doing something good for themselves or for the blogging community. We could’ve pushed back hard about this stuff and maybe helped a lot of bloggers, but instead we’re too busy making chatbots.

No, their goal to make sell something fast enough before the next sucker figures out it’s a bad bet. And I was that sucker!!

Being a for-profit blogger is hard enough without shooting myself in the foot with AI crap. I stopped using it and I stopped trusting anyone who uses it. I’m still blogging for-profit, but it’s not going to be my focus for a while. I’m just waiting for that bubble to pop…


  1. This is my not-for-profit/just-for-fun blog, here. ;D β†©οΈŽ
  2. While also lamenting Google’s implementation of AI summaries that sucked away their blog visitors. Ironic! β†©οΈŽ

πŸ”— traditional linen weaving, permacomputing, sloppers

Happy Monday! I forgot I had this drafted for a week or so…whoops…

Crafts & Hobbies

Marshall Dry Goods was recommended as a potential replacement to JOANN for a fabric source.

I don’t know how this got into my tabs but it’s an English transcription (with screenshots) of a German documentary about traditional linen weaving in the town of Dickenshied in 1978/1979.

Axxuy shared some typewriter resources for people interested in getting one and/or joining the typewriter-user community.

Continue reading “πŸ”— traditional linen weaving, permacomputing, sloppers”

πŸ”— ai spams fediverse, zine library, permacomputing

Happy Saturday! It’s absolutely beautiful outside and I sat for several hours this morning under a tree, reading Moby-Duck

Some links for you:

Aphyr wrote about an ongoing issue on Mastodon where AI spam accounts are signing up and getting through the initial checks; these are small, super-specific servers for tiny groups of people (queer/kinky/cozy fans even) and the bots use language with specific keywords and phrases to seem human enough to get through. The comments have some discussion about what this could mean for moderation/community engagement and how small communities survive on personal recommendations.

The Locavore Guide to Shopping New York City is a (physical!) directory of small indie shops with amazing local good! The writer does fun TikTok videos of her tracking down specific foods (and other stuff) and recently came out with this guide. There’s a website version too but honestly the book is so cute and would be great to carry around while sightseeing.

This is an AMAZING project: a directory of Georgia pagan groups from 1996-2025, WITH contact info and links to websites and so on. The author (MunuΕ‘ninanna) built it using data from WitchVox (RIP) and other internet sources; they include a great sources page, and even a 90s pagan webring page! Really a fab effort and I’m seriously considering doing one for California. (I do have an in-progress Pagan Links page with some stuff listed, in the meanwhile.)

Somebody’s uploaded a bunch of 90s dELiA*s catalogs images to Tumblr! Nobody at my middle school dressed like this, but we all wanted to.

If you’re a dumpster diver, or a wanna be diver, then Dumpstermap.org may be helpful to you.

Some zine links: Sherwood Forest Zine Library has a digital branch with tons of interesting zines; Echo Zines wrote a great review of Wort, a journal dedicated to herbalism through the lens of intersectional activism; The Zinester’s Guide to Staples and Stock (PDF version) is available from Cracked Egg Press for $3, or $1.50 with coupon ILOVESTAPLES until August 3rd.

Couple new releases from Project Gutenberg that caught my eye: On Old Cape Cod by Ferdinand C. Lane; The Penny Magazine of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, Issue 2, April 7, 1832; and A Tour in Mongolia by Beatrix Manico Gull.

@tamaranth wrote a great review of The Scandalous Letters of V and J by Felicia Davin, a queer fantasy romance which I’m adding to my TBR ASAP.

A few computer-y links:

Permacomputing is “both a concept and a community of practice oriented around issues of resilience and regenerativity in computer and network technology inspired by permaculture.” Be sure to check out their library and projects pages, too!

DistroWatch.com tracks Linux releases and projects.

PrePostPrint “highlights experimental publications made with free software” which in practice seems to be a mix of text production and ways to make the web into a text production, more or less. Some very interesting things in the resources list!


Need more stuff to read? I’ve compiled all previous linkspam posts here on my website, or you can explore the linkspam tag to find more.

πŸ”— punk 101, star trek web clique, business borg

Hi, happy Friday! Here’s some interesting links that have been lurking in my tab collection (some of them since MAY):

Here’s a bookmarklet for copying IMDB info for quick updates or review posts or what have you. It ends up looking like this:

🎬 Cold Comfort Farm: Directed by John Schlesinger. With Eileen Atkins, Kate Beckinsale, Sheila Burrell, Stephen Fry. A recently orphaned young woman goes to live with eccentric relatives in Sussex, where she sets about improving their gloomy lives. πŸ”—

Cute!

National Parks Travelers Club is for people who love visiting US nat’l parks! They have meet-ups and stuff too, super fun!

Punk 101 Masterlist which links to various things that may interest punks (or those who admire punk ethics), including zines!

I’ve never eaten acorns and haven’t particularly thought of doing so before, but if you’re in the right part of the world you can apparently do just that. Here’s a guide for collecting and processing edible acorns from Edgewood Nursery.

Wikimedia Commons has a photo competition ongoing through July 31st. Basically they’re looking for photos of natural protected areas from various countries (full list on the site) and you can win a bit of money if your photo is chosen as the best.

I really enjoy Sacha Judd’s newsletter, “what you love matters,” which focuses on online culture– but the fun stuff! Basically it’s just a collection of interesting links and fun personal updates. It’s hosted on Buttondown, so if you don’t want another email coming to your inbox you can sub via RSS (which is what I did).

Here’s a Star Trek-themed web clique to join if you have a personal website! It doesn’t have to be a Star Trek website.

An excellent article about AI’s impact on culture: Generative AI and the Business Borg aesthetic by Tracy Durnell:

‘Why am I naming this after the Borg? Like Star Trek’s Borg, this is an aesthetic rooted in extractive consumption, assimilationist dominance, neo-colonial expansionism, self-righteous conviction, reductionist thinking, and proclamations of inevitability. It idolizes technology, often inspired by older science-fiction, and draws on cyberpunk aesthetics. The Silicon Valley Collective values groupthink and believes themselves superior to β€œthe other.”’

This short documentary from Maximilien Van Aertryck and Axel Danielson via the New York Times has been making the rounds lately: Did the Camera Ever Tell the Truth? | Death of a Fantastic Machine which sounds like it’s a history of the camera but is really about how we interact with media (including AI images).


Need more stuff to read? I’ve compiled all previous linkspam posts here on my website, or you can explore the linkspam tag to find more.